140 cm3 equals 140 mL (since 1 cm3 is equal to 1 mL). To convert mL to L, you divide by 1000, so 140 mL is equal to 0.14 L.
The answer is 8.7 L. To convert cubic centimeters (cm3) to liters (L), divide the value in cm3 by 1000.
1 l = 1 000 mLSo 56827,008 cm3 (=mL) is equal to 56,827 L.
1 cm^3 is equal to 0.001 liters. Therefore, 4 cm^3 is equal to 0.004 liters.
157/412 = 0.381g/cm3 Divide 157 by 412: d = 157/412= 0.381 g/cm3 (or kg/L) But this seems to low for common fluids, and to high for heavy gases, so I'm very curious what kind of substance this is
10 cm3 - A cc (cubic centimeter, cm3) and a mL (milliliter) are equal to each other in terms of volume.
L is much larger than cm3
1 cm3 is 0.001liters.
5.0 L = 5000 cm31 L = 1000 cm3
1 Liter = 1,000 mL = 1,000 cm3 (1.2 gm/cm3) x (1,000 cm3/L) = (1.2 x 1,000) (gm - cm3 / cm3 - L) = 1,200 gm/L This is the solution per the numbers postulated in the question, but the whole situation is suspicious. That's an awfully large density given for air ... in fact, it's actually about 20% heavier than water.
No. Mostly yes, but... 1 cc = 1 cm3 and 1 cm3 of water has a mass of 1 gram - NOT weight, which depends on the force of gravity. 1 litre = 1000 cc. So 1 L of water has a mass of 1 kg.
To convert cm3 to litres, divide the number of cubic centimeters by 1000. Since 1 litre is equal to 1000 cm3, if you have 500 cm3 of water, it is equivalent to 0.5 litres.